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Dive into the research topics where Giuseppe Vespasiani is active.

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Featured researches published by Giuseppe Vespasiani.


Lancet Oncology | 2006

Sequential BCG and electromotive mitomycin versus BCG alone for high-risk superficial bladder cancer: a randomised controlled trial

Savino M. Di Stasi; Antonella Giannantoni; Arcangelo Giurioli; Marco Valenti; G. Zampa; L. Storti; F. Attisani; Andrea De Carolis; Giovanni Capelli; Giuseppe Vespasiani; Robert L. Stephen

BACKGROUND The rationale for combining anticancer drugs has not been applied consistently to use of intravesical agents for treatment of superficial bladder cancer, for which immunotherapeutic BCG and chemotherapeutic mitomycin seem to be a potentially effective combination. We aimed to do a prospective, randomised comparison of BCG alone with that of sequential BCG and electromotive mitomycin in patients with stage pT1 bladder cancer. METHODS After transurethral resection and multiple biopsies, 212 patients with stage pT1 bladder cancer were randomly assigned to: 81 mg BCG infused over 120 min once a week for 6 weeks (n=105); or to 81 mg BCG infused over 120 min once a week for 2 weeks, followed by 40 mg electromotive mitomycin (intravesical electric current 20 mA for 30 min) once a week as one cycle for three cycles (n=107). Complete responders underwent maintenance treatment: those assigned BCG alone had one infusion of 81 mg BCG once a month for 10 months, and those assigned BCG and mitomycin had 40 mg electromotive mitomycin once a month for 2 months, followed by 81 mg BCG once a month as one cycle for three cycles. The primary endpoint was disease-free interval; secondary endpoints were time to progression; overall survival; and disease-specific survival. Analyses were done by intention to treat. This trial has been submitted for registration at the US National Cancer Institute website . FINDINGS Median follow-up was 88 months (IQR 63-110). Patients assigned sequential BCG and electromotive mitomycin had higher disease-free interval than did those assigned BCG alone (69 months [95% CI 55-86] vs 21 months [15-54]; difference between groups 48 months [42-54], log-rank p=0.0012). Patients assigned sequential BCG and electromotive mitomycin also had lower recurrence (41.9% [32.7-51.5] vs 57.9% [48.7-67.5]; difference between groups 16.0% [2.7-29.3], log-rank p=0.0012); progression (9.3% [3.8-14.8] vs 21.9% [17.9-25.9]; difference between groups 12.6% [3.0-22.2], log-rank p=0.004); overall mortality (21.5% [13.5-29.5] vs 32.4% [23.4-41.4], difference between groups 10.9% [0.6-21.2], log-rank p=0.045); and disease-specific mortality (5.6% [1.2-10.0] vs 16.2% [6.1-23.3], difference between groups 10.6% [2.5-18.7], log-rank p=0.01). Side-effects were mainly localised to the bladder. INTERPRETATION BCG-induced inflammation might increase the permeability of the bladder mucosa such that mitomycin can reach the target tissue more easily and exert its anticancer effect.


Oncogene | 2007

The RNA-binding protein Sam68 contributes to proliferation and survival of human prostate cancer cells

Roberta Busà; Donatella Farini; E Pierantozzi; F Botti; D F Angelini; F Attisani; Giuseppe Vespasiani; Claudio Sette

The tyrosine kinase Src is frequently activated in advanced human prostate carcinomas and its activation correlates with tyrosine phosphorylation of the RNA-binding protein Sam68. Herein, we have investigated the expression and function of Sam68 in human prostate cancer cells. Analysis of specimens obtained from 20 patients revealed that Sam68 is upregulated at the protein level in 35% of the samples. Real-time polymerase chain reaction confirmed the results at the mRNA level in most patients. Downregulation of Sam68 by RNAi in LNCaP prostate cancer cells delayed cell cycle progression and reduced the proliferation rate. Moreover, depletion of Sam68 sensitized cells to apoptosis induced by DNA-damaging agents. Similarly, stable cell lines expressing a truncated GFP-Sam68GSG protein displayed reduced growth rates and higher sensitivity to cisplatin-induced apoptosis. Microarray analyses revealed that a subset of genes involved in proliferation and apoptosis were altered when Sam68 was knocked down in LNCaP cells. Our results indicate that Sam68 expression supports prostate cancer cells proliferation and survival to cytotoxic agents.


BioMed Research International | 2014

The Role of Intrinsic Pathway in Apoptosis Activation and Progression in Peyronie's Disease

Carla Loreto; Giampiero La Rocca; Rita Anzalone; Rosario Caltabiano; Giuseppe Vespasiani; Sergio Castorina; David J. Ralph; Selim Cellek; Giuseppe Musumeci; Salvatore Giunta; Rados Djinovic; Dragoslav Basic; Salvatore Sansalone

Peyronies disease (PD) is characterized with formation of fibrous plaques which result in penile deformity, pain, and erectile dysfunction. The aim of this study was to investigate the activation of the intrinsic apoptotic pathway in plaques from PD patients. Tunica albuginea from either PD or control patients was assessed for the expression of bax, bcl-2 and caspases 9 and 3 using immunohistochemistry and by measurement of apoptotic cells using TUNEL assay. Bax overexpression was observed in metaplastic bone tissue, in fibroblasts, and in myofibroblast of plaques from PD patients. Little or no bcl-2 immunostaining was detected in samples from either patients or controls. Caspase 3 immunostaining was very strong in fibrous tissue, in metaplasic bone osteocytes, and in primary ossification center osteoblasts. Moderate caspase 9 immunostaining was seen in fibrous cells plaques and in osteocytes and osteoblasts of primary ossification centers from PD patients. Control samples were negative for caspase 9 immunostaining. In PD patients the TUNEL immunoassay showed intense immunostaining of fibroblasts and myofibroblasts, the absence of apoptotic cells in metaplasic bone tissue and on the border between fibrous and metaplastic bone tissue. Apoptosis occurs in stabilized PD plaques and is partly induced by the intrinsic pathway.


Lancet Oncology | 2011

Electromotive instillation of mitomycin immediately before transurethral resection for patients with primary urothelial non-muscle invasive bladder cancer: a randomised controlled trial

Savino M. Di Stasi; Marco Valenti; Cristian Verri; Emanuele Liberati; Arcangelo Giurioli; G. Leprini; Francesco Masedu; Antonio R Ricci; Francesco Micali; Giuseppe Vespasiani

BACKGROUND The clinical effect of intravesical instillation of chemotherapy immediately after transurethral resection of bladder tumours (TURBT) has recently been questioned, despite its recommendation in guidelines. Our aim was to compare TURBT alone with immediate post-TURBT intravesical passive diffusion (PD) of mitomycin and immediate pre-TURBT intravesical electromotive drug administration (EMDA) of mitomycin in non-muscle invasive bladder cancer. METHODS We did a multicentre, randomised, parallel-group study in patients with primary non-muscle invasive bladder cancer in three centres in Italy between Jan 1, 1994, and Dec 31, 2003. Patients were randomly assigned to receive treatment by means of stratified blocked randomisation across six strata. Patients and physicians giving the interventions were aware of assignment, but it was masked from outcome assessors and data analysts. Patients were randomly assigned to receive TURBT alone, immediate post-TURBT instillation of 40 mg PD mitomycin dissolved in 50 mL sterile water infused over 60 min, or immediate pre-TURBT instillation of 40 mg EMDA mitomycin dissolved in 100 mL sterile water with intravesical 20 mA pulsed electric current for 30 min. Our primary endpoints were recurrence rate and disease-free interval. Analyses were done by intention to treat. Follow-up for our trial is complete. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01149174. FINDINGS 124 patients were randomly assigned to receive TURBT alone, 126 to receive immediate post-TURBT PD mitomycin, and 124 to receive immediate pre-TURBT EMDA mitomycin. 22 patients were excluded from our analyses because they did meet our eligibility criteria after TURBT: 11 had stage pT2 disease and 11 had carcinoma in situ. Median follow-up was 86 months (IQR 57-125). Patients assigned to receive EMDA mitomycin before TURBT had a lower rate of recurrence (44 [38%] of 117) than those assigned to receive PD mitomycin after TURBT (70 [59%] of 119) and TURBT alone (74 [64%] of 116; log-rank p<0·0001). Patients assigned to receive EMDA mitomycin before TURBT also had a higher disease-free interval (52 months, IQR 32-184) than those assigned to receive PD mitomycin after TURBT (16 months, 12-168) and TURBT alone (12 months, 12-37; log-rank p<0·0001). We recorded persistent bladder symptoms after TURBT in 18 (16%) of 116 patients in the TURBT-alone group (duration 3-7 days), 37 (31%) of 119 in the PD mitomycin post-TURBT group (duration 20-30 days), and 24 (21%) of 117 in the EMDA mitomycin pre-TURBT group (duration 7-12 days); haematuria after TURBT in eight (7%) of 116 patients in the TURBT-alone group, 16 (13%) of 119 in the PD mitomycin post-TURBT group, and 11 (9%) of 117 in the EMDA mitomycin pre-TURBT group; and bladder perforation after TURBT in five (4%) of 116 patients in the TURBT-alone group, nine (8%) of 119 in the PD mitomycin post-TURBT group, and seven (6%) of 117 in the EMDA mitomycin pre-TURBT group. INTERPRETATION Intravesical EMDA mitomycin before TURBT is feasible and safe; moreover, it reduces recurrence rates and enhances the disease-free interval compared with intravesical PD mitomycin after TURBT and TURBT alone. FUNDING None.


American Journal of Pathology | 2004

Expression of a Truncated Form of the c-Kit Tyrosine Kinase Receptor and Activation of Src Kinase in Human Prostatic Cancer

Donatella Farini; Innocenzo Sammarco; Giovanni Maturo; Giuseppe Vespasiani; Raffaele Geremia; Pellegrino Rossi; Claudio Sette

A truncated form of the c-Kit tyrosine kinase receptor, originally identified in mouse haploid germ cells, is aberrantly expressed in human cancer cell lines of various origin. This alternative transcript originates in the 15th intron of the human c-kit gene. We have previously demonstrated that sperm-carried mouse truncated c-Kit (tr-Kit) is a strong activator of the Src-family tyrosine kinases both in transfected cells and in mouse oocytes. In the present work, we report that human tr-Kit mRNA and protein are expressed in LNCaP prostatic cancer cells. We have identified two regions in the 15th and 16th introns of the human c-kit gene that show homology with sequences in the spermatid-specific tr-Kit promoter within the 16th intron of mouse c-kit. We also show that nuclear factors present in LNCaP cells bind to discrete sequences of the mouse tr-Kit promoter. Moreover, Western blot analysis of 23 primary prostate cancers indicated that tr-Kit was expressed in approximately 28% of the tumors at less advanced stages (Gleason grade 4 to 6) and in 66% of those at more advanced stages (Gleason grade 7 to 9), whereas it was not expressed in benign prostatic hypertrophies. Sequencing of the cDNA for the truncated c-Kit, amplified from both LNCaP cells and neoplastic tissues, confirmed the existence in prostate cancer cells of a transcript arising from the 15th intron of human c-kit. We also show that tr-Kit-expressing LNCaP cells and prostatic tumors have higher levels of phosphorylated/activated Src than tr-Kit-negative PC3 cells or prostatic tumors, and that transfection of tr-Kit in PC3 cells caused a dramatic increase in Src activity. Interestingly, we found that Sam68, a RNA-binding protein phosphorylated by Src in mitosis, is phosphorylated only in prostate tumors expressing tr-Kit. Indeed, both activation of Src and phosphorylation of Sam68 were observed in all of the three grade 7 to 9 tumors analyzed that expressed tr-Kit. Our data describe for the first time the existence of a truncated c-Kit protein in primary tumors and show a correlation between tr-Kit expression and activation of the Src pathway in the advanced stages of the disease. Thus, these results might pave the way for the elucidation of a novel pathway in neoplastic transformation of prostate cells.


Neurourology and Urodynamics | 1998

Urological dysfunctions and upper urinary tract involvement in multiple sclerosis patients.

Antonella Giannantoni; Giorgio Scivoletto; Savino M. Di Stasi; Maria Grazia Grasso; Giuseppe Vespasiani; V. Castellano

The goal of the present study was to investigate the involvement of the upper urinary tract (UUT) in patients with multiple sclerosis and its relationship with other neurological and urological features of the disease.


Urologia Internationalis | 2007

Stones and Urinary Tract Infections

Roberto Miano; Stefano Germani; Giuseppe Vespasiani

The term infection stones refers to calculi that occur following urinary tract infections (UTIs) caused by urease-producing gram-negative organisms. They consist of magnesium ammonium phosphate, carbonate apatite and monoammonium urate. Alkaline urine is most favorable to their formation. Urinary tract obstruction, neurogenic bladder, voiding dysfunction, temporary or indwelling urinary catheters, distal renal tubular acidosis and medullary sponge kidney are considered the main risk factors for developing infection stones. Urinalysis and urine culture are essential for diagnosis. A typical finding on imaging is a moderately radiopaque, staghorn or branched stone. Curative treatment is possible only by eliminating all of the stone fragments and by eradicating UTI. A variety of operative and pharmaceutical approaches is available. Metaphylactic treatment is mandatory to prevent recurrences. The relationship between urinary stones and UTIs is well known and shows two different clinical pictures: (1) stones that develop following UTIs (infection stones) which play a key role in stone pathogenesis, and (2) stones complicated by UTIs (stones with infection) which are metabolic stones that passively trap bacteria from coexistent UTIs and may consist of calcium or non-calcium. This article presents an overview of infection stones, analyzing the epidemiology, composition, pathogenesis, diagnosis, treatment and prevention of this type of calculi.


Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation | 1999

Lower urinary tract dysfunction and disability status in patients with multiple sclerosis

Antonella Giannantoni; Giorgio Scivoletto; Savino M. Di Stasi; Maria Grazia Grasso; Enrico Finazzi Agrò; Giuseppe Collura; Giuseppe Vespasiani

OBJECTIVE To investigate the correlation between neurologic and urologic status in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS). MATERIALS AND METHODS Between January 1993 and December 1995, 116 patients with MS symptoms were fully assessed neurologically and urologically with urodynamic studies. RESULTS Urodynamic abnormalities were detected in 104 patients (89.6%). Several significant relationships between urinary tract findings and neurologic dysfunction were: (1) the relation between voiding disorder as the presenting symptom of the disease and a higher severity of bladder dysfunction; (2) the relation between reduced bladder sensation and longer duration of voiding disorders, lower detrusor uninhibited contractions threshold, and lower bladder capacity; and (3) the relation between voiding disorders and cerebellar system score. Finally, a significant inverse relationship was found between detrusor hypocontractility and neurologic status (from the Expanded Disability Status Scale, pyramidal system score, and Barthel Index). CONCLUSIONS In this series a high incidence of patients reported voiding disorder as the presenting symptom of MS. These patients also showed a higher severity of urodynamic disorders. They should be rigorously followed up. Furthermore, our data suggest that although the most common cause of altered bladder control in MS is spinal cord pathology, involvement of cortical centers and/or peripheral neuronal lesions may occur.


The Journal of Sexual Medicine | 2012

Does Current Scientific and Clinical Evidence Support the Use of Phosphodiesterase Type 5 Inhibitors for the Treatment of Premature Ejaculation? A Systematic Review and Meta‐analysis

Anastasios D. Asimakopoulos; Roberto Miano; Enrico Finazzi Agrò; Giuseppe Vespasiani; Enrico Spera

INTRODUCTION Premature ejaculation (PE) is a highly prevalent and complex syndrome that remains poorly defined and inadequately characterized. Pharmacotherapy represents the current basis of lifelong PE treatment. AIM The goal of this study was to assess the role of phosphodiesterase type 5 inhibitors (PDE5-Is) in the treatment of patients with PE without associated erectile dysfunction (ED). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE The posttreatment intravaginal ejaculatory latency time was used as the primary end point of efficacy. METHODS A systematic review of the literature was performed by electronically searching the MedLine database for peer-reviewed articles regarding the mechanism of action and the clinical trials of PDE5 in the management of PE. A meta-analysis of these clinical studies was performed to pool the efficacy. RESULTS Twenty-nine articles that examined the supposed mechanisms of action and 14 articles that reported data from clinical studies were reviewed. The PDE5 may exert their influence by increasing the levels of nitric oxide both centrally (reducing sympathetic drive) and peripherally (leading to smooth-muscle dilatation of the seminal tract). These drugs may also induce peripheral analgesia to prolong the duration of the erection, increase confidence, improve the perception of ejaculatory control and overall sexual satisfaction, and decrease the postorgasmic refractory time for achieving a second erection after ejaculation. Concerning the efficacy, the meta-analysis shows an overall positive effect for the use of PDE5 as monotherapy or as components of a combination regimen in the treatment of PE. The major limitations of the published literature included poor study design, the absence of solid methodology, which was characterized by the lack of a unique PE definition, and the lack of appropriate endpoints for outcome evaluation of a placebo control arm and of Institutional Review Board approval. CONCLUSION There is inadequate, partial basic, and clinical evidence to support the use of PDE5 for the treatment of PE.


Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2007

Valproic acid induces neuroendocrine differentiation and UGT2B7 up-regulation in human prostate carcinoma cell line

Alessandra Valentini; Michela Biancolella; Francesca Amati; Paolo Gravina; Roberto Miano; Giovanni Chillemi; Alessio Farcomeni; Susana Bueno; Giuseppe Vespasiani; Alessandro Desideri; Giorgio Federici; Giuseppe Novelli; Sergio Bernardini

Prostate cancer originates as an androgen-dependent hyperproliferation of the epithelial cells of the gland and it evolves in an androgen-independent, highly aggressive cancer for which no successful therapy is available to date. Neuroendocrine (NE) differentiation plays an important role in the progression of prostate cancer to an androgen-independent state with profound impact on prostate cancer (CaP) therapies. Actually, new approaches on treating advanced prostate cancer are focused on modulators of epigenetic transcriptional regulation. A new class of antitumoral agents is emerging: histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors are interesting for their ability to arrest cell growth, to induce cell differentiation, and in some cases, to induce apoptosis of cancer cells. We studied the effect of valproic acid (VPA), an inhibitor of HDAC, in the human prostate androgen-dependent cancer cell line LNCaP. We observed that VPA promotes neuroendocrine-like differentiation associated with an increase in the expression of neuron-specific enolase, a decrease in prostate-specific antigen, and a down-regulation of androgen receptor protein, suggesting a modulation in the responsiveness to androgen therapy. Furthermore, selective gene expression profiling using a low-density microarray showed that VPA was able to modulate the expression of different androgen metabolism genes. We observed a down-regulation of androgen receptor coregulator (ARA24) and prostate-specific antigen, and an up-regulation of some of the UDP-glucuronosyltransferases (UGT2B11 and UGT2B7) implicated in catabolism of dihydrotestosterone (DHT) was detected. Even though UGT2B7 has only about one-tenth to one-hundredth the activity of UGT2B15 and 2B17 toward active androgens and we did not found any modulation in gene expression of these enzymes, it can be hypothesized that VPA might enhance DHT catabolism in this in vitro model and induces NE differentiation. Our data seem to raise concern about CaP treatment with VPA.

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Roberto Miano

Sapienza University of Rome

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G Virgili

University of Perugia

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Enrico Finazzi Agrò

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Salvatore Micali

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Pierluigi Bove

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Savino M. Di Stasi

Sapienza University of Rome

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